■ Crime
ID numbers prevent thefts
Imprinting identification numbers on motorbikes has greatly reduced thefts, the Taipei City Police Department (TCPD) said yesterday. The National Police Agency last March launched a program that provides motorcycle owners with free imprinting of a serial engine number or license plate number on several parts of their bikes, with the aim of discouraging thieves by making disposal of their loot more difficult. TCPD tallies showed that it has assisted in the imprinting of 215,000 motorcycles since the beginning of the program. Officials said the reported number of motorbike thefts from July last year to February this year in its precinct has dropped by 12.62 percent compared to the same period a year earlier: specifically, from 6995 cases to 6112.
■ Society
Cremation rate rises
Concepts of interment have evidently undergone dramatic changes over the past decade given that the cremation rate rose to 85.6 percent last year, a survey on burial behavior published by the Ministry of the Interior showed yesterday. The results of the survey were announced in the run-up to Tombsweeping Day, which falls on Thursday. The survey noted that the cremation rate was 58.67 percent in 1997. The figure rose to 85.6 percent last year, showing that the public's ideas about interment have undergone change and that cremation, not traditional burial, is now the mainstream choice. The survey also showed that expenses for burials have decreased by NT$13,612 over the past 10 years, noting that the expenses averaged NT$354,145 last year, down from NT$367,757 in 1997.
■ Medicine
Thoracoscope a success
The mini thoracoscope, which has been used in clinical treatment of pneumothorax, or collapsed lung, since 2001 has helped reduce the relapse rate from 8 percent to 2 percent, sources at National Taiwan University Hospital said yesterday. An expert on thoracoscopic surgery in the NTUH's Department of Surgery explained that the hospital began using the mini thoracoscope because it allows for minimally invasive surgery, adding that the hospital's staff have refined the operation process by using a new adhesive to reduce the chance of relapse. Conventionally, talcum powder is used to create an adhesive effect in the surgical process, the expert noted. But the hospital staff came up with the idea of replacing talcum powder with the antibiotic Minocycline which proved to be more effective while also facilitating recovery.
■ Crime
Men nabbed for illegal entry
A resident of Kinmen and two of his brothers-in-law from China were nabbed early yesterday morning for illegally entering Taiwanese territory, officials from the Coast Guard Administration's (CGA) Kinmen station said yesterday. The man, surnamed Yeh, was monitored by CGA radar while accompanying two Chinese men surnamed Liu -- whom Yeh identified as his brothers-in-law -- in an attempt to sneak into Kinmen aboard a Fujian fishing boat in the early hours of yesterday morning. The three men -- apprehended for attempting to land on a beach in Liehyu, a small island west of Kinmen, without entrance papers -- were handed over to the Kinmen District Prosecutor's Office for questioning, CGA officials said. According to Yeh, he traveled to Xiamen City in Fujian Province two days ago to meet with the Liu brothers before the three set off from Xiamen for Kinmen on Sunday night.
■ Diplomacy
MOFA says Taiwanese safe
A strong earthquake and subsequent tsunami yesterday inflicted severe damage and casualties on the Solomon Islands, one of Taiwan's allies in South Pacific. Taiwan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman David Wang (王建業) said yesterday that Taiwanese residents and diplomats on the islands had all been safely accounted for. Wang said that electricity in the Solomon Islands capital, Honiara, did not fail, but that since the extent of the disaster was still unclear at this time, the extent of aid that Taiwan would provide was still being evaluated. Wang said that the ministry would make an announcement on the extent of any aid in due course.
■ Animal Welfare
Adoption time extended
The Jianguo Holiday Flower Market in Taipei City will be expanding the hours of its stray dog and cat adoption stand to allow a larger number of animal protection groups to participate. The stand had previously been open for only a half a day on Sundays, but now it will be open for a full day on Sundays and half a day on Saturdays instead. The Taipei Municipal Institute for Animal Health also said that it would be increasing the number of groups and animal hospitals eligible to use the stand by as many as 30. The Taipei Municipal Institute for Animal Health urged people to adopt pets instead of buying them, and warned that the groups participating in the revised plan would be strictly prohibited from selling the animals. However, interested groups may apply to the Taipei Department of Social Welfare if they wish to try to raise funds while using the stand.
Former Czech Republic-based Taiwanese researcher Cheng Yu-chin (鄭宇欽) has been sentenced to seven years in prison on espionage-related charges, China’s Ministry of State Security announced yesterday. China said Cheng was a spy for Taiwan who “masqueraded as a professor” and that he was previously an assistant to former Cabinet secretary-general Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰). President-elect William Lai (賴清德) on Wednesday last week announced Cho would be his premier when Lai is inaugurated next month. Today is China’s “National Security Education Day.” The Chinese ministry yesterday released a video online showing arrests over the past 10 years of people alleged to be
THE HAWAII FACTOR: While a 1965 opinion said an attack on Hawaii would not trigger Article 5, the text of the treaty suggests the state is covered, the report says NATO could be drawn into a conflict in the Taiwan Strait if Chinese forces attacked the US mainland or Hawaii, a NATO Defense College report published on Monday says. The report, written by James Lee, an assistant research fellow at Academia Sinica’s Institute of European and American Studies, states that under certain conditions a Taiwan contingency could trigger Article 5 of NATO, under which an attack against any member of the alliance is considered an attack against all members, necessitating a response. Article 6 of the North Atlantic Treaty specifies that an armed attack in the territory of any member in Europe,
LIKE FAMILY: People now treat dogs and cats as family members. They receive the same medical treatments and tests as humans do, a veterinary association official said The number of pet dogs and cats in Taiwan has officially outnumbered the number of human newborns last year, data from the Ministry of Agriculture’s pet registration information system showed. As of last year, Taiwan had 94,544 registered pet dogs and 137,652 pet cats, the data showed. By contrast, 135,571 babies were born last year. Demand for medical care for pet animals has also risen. As of Feb. 29, there were 5,773 veterinarians in Taiwan, 3,993 of whom were for pet animals, statistics from the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Agency showed. In 2022, the nation had 3,077 pediatricians. As of last
XINJIANG: Officials are conducting a report into amending an existing law or to enact a special law to prohibit goods using forced labor Taiwan is mulling an amendment prohibiting the importation of goods using forced labor, similar to the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA) passed by the US Congress in 2021 that imposed limits on goods produced using forced labor in China’s Xinjiang region. A government official who wished to remain anonymous said yesterday that as the US customs law explicitly prohibits the importation of goods made using forced labor, in 2021 it passed the specialized UFLPA to limit the importation of cotton and other goods from China’s Xinjiang Uyghur region. Taiwan does not have the legal basis to prohibit the importation of goods